Event also open to students interested in joining new student chapter of the organization

Lindsay Demblowski spent the summer in Rwanda as part of the nonprofit Engineering World Health organization as part of a team training students and technicians to repair medical equipment in a regional hospital. Members of the organization will be on campus to talk about opportunities with the organization and to launch a new local chapter of Engineering World Health.

Edward Hutton, chief operating officer of the international organization, Engineering World Health, will be on campus this week to talk about the role engineers play in supporting the health care and medical communities in the developing world. Hutton will meet with students at 3 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 12 in the Senior Design Center, located on the fourth floor in RIT’s Kate Gleason College of Engineering.

A Rochester chapter of the organization is under development and students interested in joining the new chapter can learn more about the process and the organization. The program is free and open to all RIT students.

“This is 100 percent open to all students on campus—not just engineers,” said Lindsay Demblowski, a second-year biomedical engineering student. Demblowski participated in the organization’s summer program, traveling to Rwanda, from May through August of this year to help medical personnel repair incubators at a regional hospital. She will discuss that experience and other opportunities with the organization for student internships.

“This is very important because the design contest called “projects that matter” requires a lot of innovation and different thinking.”

Contact Demoblowski by email at lad8988@rit.edu with questions about the campus event or the new student chapter.

NOTE: Demblowski and Daniel Phillips, director of RIT’s biomedical engineering program, will also be part of a community panel earlier the same day, featuring senior leaders of Engineering World Health at noon at the Rochester Bioventure Center, part of High Tech Rochester, located in Henrietta.

Supplied photo

Lindsay Demblowski spent the summer in Rwanda as part of the nonprofit Engineering World Health organization as part of a team training students and technicians to repair medical equipment in a regional hospital. Members of the organization will be on campus to talk about opportunities with the organization and to launch a new local chapter of Engineering World Health.